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#41
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In message , at 11:18:14 on Mon, 27
Jul 2009, Tom Barry remarked: Zebra crossings and box junctions should be redesigned so that the lanes are clearly marked through them, and it should be made an offence to change lane on a box junction or zebra crossing (with public information films to explain why the change). Costly and time consuming. Why not just use a more suitable bus? Show us your working out - you need to do the roadwork *once*, And getting the new provisions into a Transport Act, and all the publicity, and the enforcement costs (in perpetuity). you need to pay the extra cost of less cost-effective buses *every year forever*. But there's also an immediate cost saving from the shorter buses because of the reduced congestion at these particular junctions. By your logic you shouldn't put in bus lanes, either, since you're discounting the upside of providing a better bus service in any cost/benefit calculation. Bus lanes *only* make sense if they have a positive cost-benefit. But what's needed here is a study of whether the alleged extra cost of shorter buses exceeds the costs of the measures you suggest. -- Roland Perry |
#42
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On Jul 26, 11:34*pm, Andy wrote:
On Jul 26, 11:06*pm, "Ian F." wrote: "Bruce" wrote in message .. . I admit to having an inbuilt patholgocial hatred of cyclists who disobey the rules of the road, so I'm as guilty as anyone. *But I do think that the bendy buses have been vilified for a lot of problems that they don't cause. I hate them for the one major problem they *do* cause - fare-dodging! Well, they don't cause the fare-dodging. Facilitate it maybe, but the it is the fare-dodgers that cause the fare-dodging. Pedantry aside, surely the solution to discouraging fare-dodging is to increase inspections, not to change the bus? I don't suppose anyone knows how the statistics compare for fare- dodging on bendy buses vs Tramlink or the DLR, where it's also easy to board without a ticket? |
#43
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David Cantrell wrote:
On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 02:34:11PM +0000, wrote: Ie perfectly servicable vehicles are about to be mothballed for no good reason other than a bunch of whining idiot cyclists and a grandstanding politician. Don't forget the people who voted for him. Don't forget the lies about 'many cyclists killed every year'. People voted for him based on that kind of crap. Boris esssentially had two choices - the brave one of admitting he was wrong and committing to a case-by-case analysis of bus routes based on objective criteria (fare evasion, junction blocking, boarding time, cost) or the cowardly one of pretending he was telling the truth and scrapping them all without consultation* or debate. We know what kind of man he is now. Tom * That's not entirely true, TfL did consult, and then ignored it despite even Westminster Council accepting that bendies made sense on the Red Arrows. |
#44
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Martin Deutsch wrote:
On Jul 26, 11:34 pm, Andy wrote: On Jul 26, 11:06 pm, "Ian F." wrote: "Bruce" wrote in message ... I admit to having an inbuilt patholgocial hatred of cyclists who disobey the rules of the road, so I'm as guilty as anyone. But I do think that the bendy buses have been vilified for a lot of problems that they don't cause. I hate them for the one major problem they *do* cause - fare-dodging! Well, they don't cause the fare-dodging. Facilitate it maybe, but the it is the fare-dodgers that cause the fare-dodging. Pedantry aside, surely the solution to discouraging fare-dodging is to increase inspections, not to change the bus? I don't suppose anyone knows how the statistics compare for fare- dodging on bendy buses vs Tramlink or the DLR, where it's also easy to board without a ticket? Or indeed on Routemasters in the old days, where when packed it was perfectly easy to dodge, apparently, not least because it could easily have been impossible to buy a ticket in the time available. We do know that fare evasion dropped sharply on Overground post-Silverlink and before that on the Underground when Oyster and gating came in, so it's likely that on the transport network as a whole fare evasion is rather lower than it was a few years ago. I have to say I don't consider fare evasion alone as sufficient reason to scrap them, not least because it nowhere near pays for the extra cost of less efficient buses, so you end up not being able to do something socially useful elsewhere in the city. Tom |
#45
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On Sun, 26 Jul 2009, MIG wrote:
Never mind class or party politics; what about "I don't like to have a totally unsuitable vehicle blocking the pedestrian crossings, forcing me to risk my life to get across the road"? That's a problem with the drivers, not the buses, and is not restricted to bendies, although of course it's worse with them. Are there any real problems with the bendies which are intrinsic to the bus itself? tom -- I know thats not really relevant but I've just typed the words and my backspace key doesn't work. -- phorenzik |
#46
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Has anyone been on the 507 today, especially during the rush? What's
it been like and is the increase in number of buses actually causing more congestion? |
#47
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On 27 July, 13:21, Tom Barry wrote:
David Cantrell wrote: On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 02:34:11PM +0000, wrote: Ie perfectly servicable vehicles are about to be mothballed for no good reason other than a bunch of whining idiot cyclists and a grandstanding politician. Don't forget the people who voted for him. Don't forget the lies about 'many cyclists killed every year'. *People voted for him based on that kind of crap. Boris esssentially had two choices - the brave one of admitting he was wrong and committing to a case-by-case analysis of bus routes based on objective criteria (fare evasion, junction blocking, boarding time, cost) or the cowardly one of pretending he was telling the truth and scrapping them all without consultation* or debate. *We know what kind of man he is now. Tom * That's not entirely true, TfL did consult, and then ignored it despite even Westminster Council accepting that bendies made sense on the Red Arrows. If this group is anything to go by, anyone promising to kill all cyclists would be a cert to win any election. Maybe people realise that voting for Boris is, in the long term, voting for cars to replace public transport (and kill plenty of cyclists). They realised that his apparent pro-cycling tendencies were just spin. |
#48
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Lucas wrote:
Has anyone been on the 507 today, especially during the rush? What's it been like and is the increase in number of buses actually causing more congestion? A couple of tweets earlier mentioned a friend waiting ten minutes and the bus being crush-loaded, but also that this was par for the course on the 507 lately. Others commenting on how small the bus was and how few seats there were. Not seen any indication of bendies still being in use so it's possible they had all the MECs in service or tried to run it with whatever they had to avoid embarrassing the Boss. Tom |
#49
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On Mon, 27 Jul 2009 12:20:53 +0100
David Cantrell wrote: On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 02:34:11PM +0000, wrote: Ie perfectly servicable vehicles are about to be mothballed for no good reason other than a bunch of whining idiot cyclists and a grandstanding politician. Don't forget the people who voted for him. I voted for him because he was less worse than the rest. But I assumed that getting rid of bendy buses was just a standard issue electoral attention grabber which would soon be brushed under the carpet once the cost had been properly worked out and common sense would prevail. If I'd known at the time that Boris was a cyclist I would have realised that common sense would be shot on sight. B2003 |
#50
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wrote in message
On Mon, 27 Jul 2009 12:20:53 +0100 Don't forget the people who voted for him. I voted for him because he was less worse than the rest. But I assumed that getting rid of bendy buses was just a standard issue electoral attention grabber which would soon be brushed under the carpet once the cost had been properly worked out and common sense would prevail. If I'd known at the time that Boris was a cyclist I would have realised that common sense would be shot on sight. I don't think it was any secret that he was and is a keen cyclist. |
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